The DA has given Sanral four days to furnish them with the missing items in the e-tolling contract documentation.
Money collected from e-tolling in Gauteng will not go overseas, says the South African National Roads Agency.
The Opposition to Urban Tolling Alliance says it has raised R2.35-million towards its court challenge to e-tolling on Gauteng’s highways.
The DA will contribute the R1-million the Opposition to Urban Tolling Alliance (Outa) needs to continue its court battle against e-tolls.
With Gauteng’s highways sewn up, Sanral turns its gaze to the Cape’s long and wineland roads.
The implementation of e-tolls on Gauteng highways is imminent, the transport department and the national roads agency said on Sunday.
The transport department is willing to engage with various sections of South Africa about the contentious e-tolling system, it has said.
Cosatu will be joined by 10 civil society bodies and some religious leaders in a series of protests against the e-tolling of Gauteng highways.
The NCOP has quietly put the South African National Roads Agency’s plans to start the tolling of Gauteng’s highways next month on hold.
Cosatu has rejected the DA’s claims that the ANC was not supporting moves to oppose tolling in the Western Cape.
But the roads agency, flush from its victory in Gauteng, is up against very different odds.
An official who heads office of deputy president says car-hire company Avis must distance itself from e-toll opponents or suffer the consequences.
Legislation paving the way for putting e-tolling on the Gauteng Freeway Improvement Project into practice has been approved in the National Assembly.
Experts have downplayed Outa’s prospects of success in its continued legal challenge of the implementation of Gauteng’s e-tolling system.
Cosatu has been deciding whether to go ahead with a planned protest at the Swartruggens toll gate on the N4.
The Opposition to Urban Tolling Alliance has urged Gauteng motorists to use every legal right available to make the e-tolling system ‘unworkable’.
Highways in Ekurhuleni and Jo’burg will be gridlocked on Thursday as Cosatu protests against the controversial e-tolling system.
ANC Youth League deputy president Ronald Lamola said he was disappointed that few white South Africans supported Cosatu’s march against e-tolling.
Any person who damaged property during the scheduled e-toll protests would have to face the law, says the government.
The e-tolling of Gauteng’s highways must be set aside because insufficient public consultation has taken place, the Pretoria High Court has heard.
The controversial Transport Laws and Related Matters Amendment Bill was withdrawn from the National Assembly order paper virtually at the last minute.
The Congress of South African Trade Unions has appealed to the government to take notice of opposition to the e-tolling of Gauteng’s freeways.
Cosatu has called for a day of civil disobedience on November 30 in protest against the e-tolling of Gauteng’s highways, it said on Wednesday evening.
Public meetings on the e-tolling of Gauteng freeways are being poorly attended, the Opposition To Urban Tolling Alliance (Outa) has said.
The highest court overturned an interdict against highway charges, but Wayne Duvenage will not give up, writes Heather Formby.
Government has stuck to its guns on the "user pays" principle and placed the cost of paying for controversial e-tolls squarely on Gauteng residents.
A confidentiality agreement on the Gauteng electronic toll collection contract was not designed to conceal information, Sanral said.
Outa says the details of the electronic toll collection contract should not be kept confidential, despite efforts to keep the information locked away.
The public may not love the South African National Roads Agency Limited (Sanral), but the auditor general has little bad to say about the company.
The government’s announcement on e-tolling in Gauteng may be delayed, the inter-ministerial committee on the Gauteng Freeway Improvement Project said.
Last week the Constitutional Court surprised few in the legal community when it overturned the high court order of Judge Bill Prinsloo.
Motorists will have to wait a little longer to learn when they will have to start shelling out cash for e-tolling, if at all.